30 research outputs found

    In the frontline of the backwater? The Nordic countries and the global population drama

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    Backed by a long history of domestic population statistics and analysis, Nordic social science -including demography - could well be in the forefront of international scientific attention to the global drama of population dynamics and development. But this appears not to be the case. The paper is devoted to a discussion of this state of affairs. Following a brief presentation of the current state of population dynamics, it offers a few examples to show the value of a wider social science approach to the analysis of population/development relations. Dramatic features in current development are contrasted against the relative lack of engagement of demographers and social scientists today.Finally, a case is made for the strengthening of links between demography and social science in general - indeed for “population studies” as a field of joint enquiry, combining the rigor of demographic methods and techniques with the theoretical substance of the social sciences

    Poverty and fertility: reproductive change under persistent poverty

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    In recent contributions to the discussion of fertility change in poor societies, two main lines of interpretation can be identified, the “materialist” and the "ideational" respectively. While the former emphasizes economic and security factors as prime causes of reproductive patterns and changes, the latter stresses the importance of diffusion of ideas and norms. The ideational perspective supports “supply side” policies for fertility decline, while the materialist perspective lends support to a more indirect welfare or “demand" side orientation to population policy. Bangladesh belongs to a group of countries with persistent and widespread poverty where the beginnings of fertility decline have now been recorded. The absence of any visibly significant socioeconomic changes for its rural majority has been used to justify claims that family planning activities have an independent effect on fertility. The paper draws together available evidence on the circumstances of rural life in Bangladesh. Taken together, the evidence is that changes have occurred in social relations in the household, brought about by economic crisis and in turn enabling changes in childbearing. The Bangladesh evidence confirms the difficulties encountered on a conceptual level in trying to maintain a distinction between materialist and ideational approaches to fertility analysis. The distinction between the two lines is unclear, and upholding it could be counterproductive to advances in the understanding of fertility change

    Human Carrying Capacity and Human Health

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    The issue of overpopulation has fallen out of favor among most contemporary demographers, economists, and epidemiologists. Discussing population control has become taboo. This taboo could be hazardous to public healt

    Contextualising Apartheid at the End of Empire: Repression, ‘Development’ and the Bantustans

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    This article examines the global dynamics of late colonialism and how these informed South African apartheid. More specifically, it locates the programmes of mass relocation and bantustan ‘self-government’ that characterised apartheid after 1959 in relation to three key dimensions. Firstly, the article explores the global circulation of idioms of ‘development’ and trusteeship in the first half of the twentieth century and its significance in shaping segregationist policy; secondly, it situates bantustan ‘selfgovernment’ in relation to the history of decolonisation and the partitions and federations that emerged as late colonial solutions; and, thirdly, it locates the tightening of rural village planning in the bantustans after 1960 in relation to the elaboration of anti-colonial liberation struggles, repressive southern African settler politics and the Cold War. It argues that, far from developing policies that were at odds with the global ‘wind of change’, South African apartheid during the 1960s and 1970s reflected much that was characteristic about late colonial strategy

    South Africa's bantustans : from dumping grounds to battlefronts

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    Within the South African State there are ten different bantustan "states", complete with administrations, military and police. Once the bantustans were described as "dumping grounds". In this paper the author shows that they are much more than that. They have turned into scenes of protest and resistance against apartheid. The bantustan leaders today are needed both by Pretoria and the ANC, and also try to defend their own interests. A post-apartheid government may need the bantustan state machinery as instruments of order and reform. This paper discusses the implications of this scenario

    HIV/AIDS on the campus: universities and the threat of an epidemic

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    As the AIDS epidemic moves from the early stages of HIV spread into a growing wave of premature deaths, its in-house impacts are felt in all formal organisations. The paper addresses the particular situation of institutions of higher learning, known to be among the last to develop management responses to the epidemic. While some smaller Ugandan universities have adopted AIDS policies, Makerere University, situated in a country hailed for its success in fighting HIV/AIDS, is yet to offer a clear response to its toll among staff and students. The fates of initiatives taken on campus since the early 1990s are discussed within a context of general demands made on a university deeply affected by the turmoil preceding the NRM government. Organisational problems in decision-making on sensitive issues are studied. The paper ends with a review of suitable theoretical approaches to explain behaviours of universities, among them Minzberg's (1993) characterisation of ‘professional bureaucracies'. Eastern Africa Social Science Research Review Vol. 22(2) 2006: 31-5

    "Mycket mer Àn en sport" : En antropologisk studie av kvinnors upplevelser av boxning, en mansdominerad idrott.

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    UtifrÄn att boxning Àr en mansdominerad sport syftar denna studie till att utforska och undersöka kvinnors erfarenheter av att ta plats och hitta en gemenskap inom boxningen. Vilka faktorer som Àr bidragande till kvinnors val att fortsÀtta boxas och hur kvinnor anpassar sig till och pÄverkas av boxningen diskuteras med hjÀlp av uppsatsens insamlade empiri och antropologiska teorier. Studien Àmnar utforska och tydliggöra sambandet, och diskutera komplexiteten, mellan genus och boxning. Genom deltagande observationer, enkÀtundersökningar och intervjuer med kvinnor som boxas undersöks kvinnornas egna upplevelser och erfarenheter kring boxning. Med detta utforskar studien hur inlÀrning sker av fysisk kunskap sÄvÀl som mental kunskap. Boxningen i sin roll som en uppfostrande institution visar sig Äterspegla samhÀllets normer genom att skapa och Äterskapa normer och regler pÄ boxningsklubben. Samtidigt som studien hÄller fokus pÄ genus och idrott sÄ bidrar den frÀmst till en fördjupning av boxning utifrÄn kvinnors perspektiv.
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